Chapter XXXIX: The Pantheon II

readx;? Pastet, sometimes referred to as the "Cat of the Pulling God". The god of music and joy www.biquge.info the pen "Fun", originally the main god of the Bupabastis region of the Nile Delta, and has been widely believed since the end of the dynasty, and is revered as the same god of war as the goddess Sekhmet. Appears as a cat or lioness in the form of a woman. She is one of the daughters of the god Ra and is related to the "eye of the sun god" for Ra's revenge. Pastettus is best known for slaying the serpent Apophis (Ra's nemesis and god of chaos) in order to protect Ra. In one myth, the god Ra sent Pastet to Nubia as a lioness. Since cats have become pets, Pastet has become an important shrine and image in the home. (The cat goddess kills the evil serpent that attacks the sun god, and is often painted on the papier-mâché grass).

Sekhmet, the daughter of the goddess Ra, the goddess lioness, was regarded in Memphis as the wife of Buta, created by the flame of Ra's own eyes to punish people for their sins, and in the later stages became a peace-loving goddess, similar to the philanthropic Pastet. Goddess Sekhmet is one of the three pillared gods of Memphis, the wife of the god Ptah, the mother of the god Nefertaem, and the daughter of the sun god Ra, and is worshipped as the goddess of battle. Appears as a lioness wearing a sun disc on her head. Revered in the same way as the goddess Thebesmaot.

When the old dragon clock was being pulled, one day he heard that the people of the upper Nile and the desert region were trying to break free from his control, and the god Ra sent Sekhmet to give them some color. Sekhmet's work went well, she was bloodthirsty, and the land of ancient Egypt was full of blood.

Seeing that the human race was about to be extinct, Ra Shen felt the seriousness of the situation, and hurriedly ordered his men to take advantage of the night to spill mellow red wine all over the land. The next day, Sekhmet mistakenly thought that blood was flowing all over the floor, and after drinking it, he was drunk and fell into a deep sleep. In this way, humanity was saved, and the awakened Sekhmet ran away from home and Egypt in a fit of rage.

La's eyes dimmed, and the sun's rays dimmed. Ra soon begins to miss Sekhmet, however, Sekhmet transforms herself into a cat and attacks all gods and people who come near her. Eventually, with the persuasion of the god Tut, Sekhmet returned to Egypt.

The red streams in the story actually originated from the red ore powder washed upstream at the beginning of the Nile flooding. So, this means the end of the "harvest season" and the arrival of the "flood season".

Maat, the goddess of truth, justice and morality, is the daughter of Ra, the sun goddess. Appears as a woman wearing an ostrich feather on her head. Goddess Maot participates in the final judgment of the soul of the deceased, and when the heart of the deceased is placed on the scale, Goddess Maot places the ostrich feather on her head on the other weighing pan of the scale to measure whether the weight is equal.

Geb, the god of the earth, denotes the ground where plants grow luxuriantly. Son of Shugi Tephnut, brother and husband of Nut, father of Osiris, Isis, Seth, Nephtis. The sacred beast is a goose, usually in the form of a man with black or green skin, representing all things that grow and the fertile Nile, respectively.

Nut Nut, goddess of the sky, mother of the sun. The daughter of Shuhephnut, Gab's wife and sister, and the mother of Osiris, Isis, Seth, and Nephtis, is usually depicted as a blue-skinned woman with stars on her body and limbs propped up on the ground, representing the curvature of the sky on the earth.

Osiris, the god of life and afterlife, the god of agriculture, the god of abundance, and the giver of civilization. He is also the king of the underworld, and executes the judgment of whether a person can receive eternal life after death. His wife, Isis, and his son, Horus, are at war with their brother the god Sett in the "Myth of Osiris". The ancient Egyptians believed that the pharaoh became the god Osiris after his death, and built a tomb and temple of the god Osiris in the holy land of Abydos. Later, the cult of Osiris became popular, and Abydos became a place of worship. Because of the abundance of crops, it appears in the form of a young green face symbolizing the budding of crops, holding a flail and a hook.

Isis), the goddess of the dead, is also the goddess of life and health. Wife of Osiris, mother of Horus, sister of Nephtis. Arguably one of the most important and popular goddesses in Egyptian mythology, the ancient Egyptians believed that she was the most magical magician in the universe because she knew the true name of the god Ra. She protects Horus' son Ashet, resurrects Osiris, and helps him rule the city of Underworld.

Seth, the god of drought, war, chaos, storms, deserts, foreign lands. Symbolizing the stormy season, it is the worst enemy of Osiris and Horus. The Nineteenth Dynasty overturned the case and re-established itself as a great god, mercifully suppressing desert and foreign powers to protect Egypt. In the "Myth of Osiris", it is the villain who assassinated his brother Osiris and opposed to Horus, the son of Osiris. The god Seth was closely associated with royal power, so some pharaohs named themselves after Seth. The god Seth was revered in the northeastern Nile Delta and parts of Upper Egypt. Appears as a man with the head of a mysterious animal that does not currently exist.

Nephtis, the protector of the undead. Appears as a woman wearing an Egyptian hieroglyphic crown. Siblings to the gods Olysses, Seth, and Isis, and the wife of the god Seth, the mother of the god Anubis, and the youngest child of Gabe and Nuth, she turned her back on her husband Seth when Seth killed Osiris and assisted Isis in caring for Horus.

Horus, the god of eagles, the patron saint of the pharaohs, and the god of the sky, has eyes on the sun and the moon. The god Horus was the son of the goddess Osiris and the goddess Isis. Pharaoh is the Horus of the human world. He was the patron saint of Upper Egypt. The god Horus fights and wins against the god Seth in "The Myth of Osiris". The worship of the god Horus began throughout the ancient Egyptian dynasties from the Old Kingdom period. It appears as a man wearing a double crested falcon on his head and a lower Egyptian head, or a falcon-headed man.

Edjo, the serpent god of the Delta, the symbol and patron saint of Lower Egypt.

Anubis, the god of death, the patron saint of the cemetery, the god of mummification. He is a wolf-headed human body, the son of Seth and Nephtis. It guides the souls of the deceased to the place of judgment while overseeing the judgment so that the deceased is saved from a second death. Originally the main god of Abydos, it was later widely worshipped.